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  • Contributors

R. L. Barth is the author of Deeply Dug In: Poems and is the editor of The Selected Letters of Yvor Winters.

Catharine Savage Brosman's most recent collection of poetry is Breakwater from Mercer University Press.

Robert Buffington has contributed prose and poetry to the SR since 1974.

Turner Cassity, a previous contributor, died on July 26th, 2009. His last two books are Devils & Islands and Under Two Flags.

Margot Demopoulos has fiction forthcoming in Fiction International. Her reviews have appeared in the Kenyon Review and elsewhere.

Malcolm Glass is a writer and photographer who has published five books of poems, including Bone Love, In the Shadow of the Gourd, and The Dinky Line.

Pat C. Hoy II continues to direct the expository writing program at nyu. His essay "Images" will appear in the fall 2010 issue.

Samuel Hynes has written two book-length memoirs about his experience in World War ii.

Clay Lewis, who lives in Washington, D.C., has been writing for the SR for over twenty years.

David Livewell's poems have previously appeared in these pages. His new book, Woven Light: Poems and Photographs from Andrew Wyeth's Pennsylvania, is available from Blurb.

Wilmer Mills, who is the Kenan visiting writer at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, is included in the Swallow Anthology of New American Poets.

Michael Mott found The Lives of Haydn and Mozart (1818) by L.A.C. Bombet in a bookshop in Bath, England, and so began his poem.

Zsuzsanna Ozsváth holds the Leah and Paul Lewis Chair in Holocaust Studies at the University of Texas at Dallas. Ozsváth lived with her family in Budapest during the Holocaust. She, her parents, and brother were saved by her former babysitter, Erzsi. Her memoir, "When the Danube Ran Red" will be published this summer by the Syracuse University Press.

Phillip Parotti, after a long teaching career, has retired to New Mexico where he continues to write and to practice the art of printmaking.

W. Brown Patterson has recently completed a book about the relation of the curriculum to the history of the University of the South—The Liberal Arts at Sewanee.

George Poe, a previous contributor, is professor of French and French Studies at the University of the South.

D. E. Richardson has contributed essays and reviews to this magazine for many years.

Michael Spence's third book of poetry is Crush Depth, recently published by Truman State University Press.

Timothy Steele is the author of several collections of poems, including Toward the Winter Solstice, and of such books of criticism as Missing Measures: Modern Poetry and the Revolt against Meter.

Wilfred Stone's "Balloon Man" (winter 2007), a related essay, earned the Spears prize for 2007.

Cushing Strout has often contributed essays and reviews to the SR since 1995.

Christopher Thornton is a previous contributor whose essays have also appeared in the Michigan Quarterly Review, the American Scholar, and Commonweal.

Helen Pinkerton Trimpi publishes poetry as Helen Pinkerton and earned the Allen Tate Poetry Prize from the SR in 1999. Her scholarly study, Melville's Confidence Men and American Politics in the 1850s, was published in 1987.

Robert G. Walker wrote an essay on Arthur Koestler for the last issue of the SR devoted to the literature of war.

Calhoun Winton is writing a history of early printing and publication in the transatlantic world. [End Page lxi]

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